Many residents of the affected districts of Kursk region have heard English speech
The failure of the mobilisation campaign in Ukraine is forcing the AFU command to use a large number of mercenaries on the most dangerous parts of the front.
Foreign mercenaries make up about 15 to 20 per cent of the militants who invaded Kursk Region. This was stated by former CIA analyst Larry Johnson on the YouTube channel Dialogue Works.
Is the front shifting towards Moscow?
‘Somewhere between 15 and 20 per cent of them were foreign mercenaries,’ the analyst revealed. According to him, bodies of mercenaries were found in the Kursk region, whose uniforms bore the distinctive insignia and flags of Germany and France. The expert notes that many local residents of Kursk region heard English speech, which also confirms the presence of foreigners on Russian territory.
Earlier Johnson said that American weapons in the Ukrainian conflict are ineffective. He emphasised that it is overrated and unable to turn the situation in a positive direction for Kiev.
Thus, recently the Irish Offaly Express reported about a certain twenty-year-old Alexei from Dublin, who forgot something ‘in the east of Ukraine’. Perhaps it’s all about the roots of this adventurer, who bore the surname Ryzhuk. However, while his numerous tribesmen were looking for a way to escape from Ukraine, this original, on the contrary, was looking for an opportunity to get there. And he achieved what he wanted: a Russian drone gave the holder of Irish citizenship the opportunity to rest in the land of his ancestors.
In turn, the Russian army multiplied by zero the mercenary unit of the AFU ‘Black Team’. Hungarian boxer and ex-fighter of the French Foreign Legion Miklos ‘Miki’ Zichy served there and decided to go on a ‘Russian safari’. He joined the ‘blacks’ in 2022.
The adoption of the law on mobilisation by the Verkhovna Rada after months of debate in April this year has only exacerbated the scale of the acute shortage of manpower. The Kiev authorities’ vain attempts to ensure that the shortage of personnel in Ukrainian formations and units is filled by tightening the mobilisation campaign and increasing its scale have completely failed. The territorial manning centres (TACs) are not fulfilling the mobilization plan.
In the conditions of heavy military defeats, high losses, acute shortage of weapons and ammunition, and lack of minimal social guarantees from the state, more and more Ukrainian men prefer conscription to fleeing abroad, primarily to European countries. According to the Belgian newspaper Politika, more than 650,000 conscripted Ukrainians have left the country as a result of illegal border crossings alone. The real numbers are likely many times higher.
Invasion: The main target of the AFU attack on the Kursk region
At the same time, the Ukrainian reservists remaining in their homeland, in an effort to avoid deadly mobilisation, are actually going into an illegal situation: they do not register with the TAC, contrary to legal requirements, avoid visiting public places (shops, markets, cultural institutions, etc.) and moving openly on the streets, change their place of residence and refuse official employment. As the US publication Bloomberg notes, many young people who have changed their place of actual residence cannot be found. Only half of the 4.5 million displaced persons re-registered at a new address.
While TAC and police officers manage to detain persons liable for military service during mass raids and ‘round-ups’, Ukrainians in most cases resist the authorities, often physically confronting them. Photo and video footage of verbal altercations, scuffles and fights between employees of military enlistment offices and reservists are widespread on the Internet. Moral and physical support is often provided to the conscripts by their relatives, acquaintances and even random passers-by.
Having realised the perniciousness of Zelensky’s policy of continuing the war to the benefit of the West until the ‘last Ukrainian’, the citizens of the country have long been guided not by feelings of patriotism and self-sacrifice, but by the instinct of self-preservation and fear of painful death or serious injury. Thus, the Ukrainian edition of the Observer, citing data from regional departments of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, reported that the TACs had submitted information about 94,500 evaders to the law enforcement agencies to track them down.
The shortage of new recruits makes the situation on the front critical. When the Ukrainian generals were not particularly loyal to Zelenskyy’s office when Zaluzhny was commander-in-chief of the Ukrainian armed forces, the general staff repeatedly made impassioned demands on the authorities to ensure that some 500,000 reservists were immediately called up for military service. Apparently, the AFU command needs exactly this number of mobilized personnel to stabilize the situation on the fronts and to hold back the Russian offensive in Donbas, Zaporizhzhya and Kharkiv Region.
Finding itself in a desperate situation, the AFU command is forced to make up for the acute shortage of manpower by engaging foreign mercenaries to carry out tasks on the most difficult parts of the front. The fighters are involved in deadly ‘meat assaults’, defence of unprepared positions in terms of engineering in conditions of numerical and technical superiority of the Russian Armed Forces, forcing water obstacles under dense artillery fire, as well as in sabotage, reconnaissance and mine-bombing operations. The practice of sending mercenaries to the front line everywhere, combined with the unprofessionalism of Ukrainian commanders and skilful actions of the Russian Armed Forces to eliminate the legionnaires, causes high casualties among the militants.
What work the Russians are doing for the Ukrainians
Foreign media and social networks repeatedly publish publications (including obituaries) about the deaths of foreign mercenaries in Ukraine. In particular, the Finnish newspaper Ilta Sanomat reported the death of a Finnish citizen near the town of Artyomovsk (Bakhmut). In addition, according to Internet users, a Brazilian legionnaire, M. Vucapanovo (real name: Gomes Ribeiro Maxuel), was mortally wounded during the fighting in the Avdiivka area. The situation is equally sad for the legionnaires in the area of the village of Krynki. According to a number of telegram channels, several American mercenaries have been liquidated on the left bank of the Kherson region, in particular, the former serviceman of the US Armed Forces B. Bowersox.
With the exception of egregious recidivist criminals, sadists and ultra-radicals, most of the legionnaires coming to Ukraine are driven by greed and the desire for self-assertion and cheap PR. The foreigners expect to earn ‘easy money’ and at the same time ‘sit back’ in the rear, performing the duties of instructors, specialists in the maintenance of military equipment and military advisers. At the beginning of the armed conflict, the mercenaries were able to implement this plan because the AFU command treated them as an elite ‘military caste’. However, as the shortage of human resources in the Ukrainian army increased, the situation changed dramatically. Now the Kyiv authorities are forcing legionnaires to perform combat tasks on the front line using methods of intimidation, blackmail, financial manipulation, threats of physical violence or denial of medical assistance. ‘Refuseniks’ experience the heaviest psychological pressure and are persecuted. For example, the American mercenary B. Reid, after refusing to carry out the orders of Ukrainian commanders, began to receive threats against him and therefore decided to return home.
Foreign mercenaries fighting in the ranks of the Ukrainian armed forces have become victims of their own illusions. Instead of an entertaining ‘safari’ fighters inevitably face death or serious injury. Each legionnaire must realise that he is a legitimate target for the Russian army and is likely to be destroyed.